MY BABY, MY ANCHOR

My Baby, My Anchor is my nephew, my brother’s son. 

Today it’s all about a quiet reflection on timeless connection and love as a steadying force.

Enduring bonds, presence, grief, and love’s gentle anchor.


Pause to breathe…


He has always been “my baby,” though now he’s grown, married, with a little daughter soon turning two. 


But in quiet moments, I still find myself leaning toward him, almost without thinking, when life stings or when the world feels too heavy.


Growing up surrounded by my mom’s and sister’s love, he carries that softness in him, gentle, humble, attentive. 


And though they are gone, their absence echoes in him, in the pauses between his words, in the way he listens, in the quiet strength he offers without asking for anything in return.


He’s a photographer, yes, capturing light and shadow through his lens; but I see him capturing life in his heart too!

Noticing the small, tender moments, the subtle expressions, the invisible threads that connect us.


And I, in turn, lean on him; not because he has all the answers, but because his presence steadies me. It’s unexpected, instinctive, a soft tether to life’s rhythm. 


In him, I find reflection, grounding, and the enduring reminder that love, even across loss, never truly leaves us.


Pause and breathe — what stirred within you?


Notes/What I Felt:


Some connections are timeless, beyond age and circumstance.


Love can be a quiet anchor, even in moments of grief.


Leaning on someone doesn’t diminish strength; it strengthens it.


Presence speaks louder than words.


Small gestures, instinctive acts, carry immense comfort.


Closing Note:

Love, once rooted, never fades. 

It simply changes form, echoing softly through those who remain.




JUST LIFE AS IT COMES

Just Life as It Comes

(Epilogue: Still Coming Home)


There comes a point where stories stop needing numbers.


Grief doesn’t stay neatly filed between beginnings and endings; it just folds itself into ordinary days. Like today, when I 

went back to Mom’s house.


It’s been a month since I last stepped inside. 


Dust had gathered in corners, and the house was not in its best. 


Silence seemed to cling to the walls. 


I brought a maid along, and together we began what I call half-baked cleaning;you know, the kind that’s equal parts dusting and remembering?


At one point, my hands found the photo 

of Mom on the wall. I traced her face with my fingertips, the curve of her smile, the softness around her eyes. 


The moment cracked something open. I found myself talking to her, apologizing for so many things; for not keeping the house the way she would have liked, for letting time slip by too quickly.


Later, I spoke with my nephew on the phone, about the house, about family, about preparing for her one-year death anniversary. He listened quietly as my voice trembled. I told him about the price of caring too much, of trying to hold together pieces that were never mine alone to mend.


The maid heard me crying. She didn’t 

say much; just kept working, quietly wiping surfaces as if cleaning could somehow soften grief. Maybe it does, 

in small ways.


There’s still more to do ie the upstairs waits for Tuesday. 


But tonight, I’m sitting with the ache and the gratitude, both. Maybe healing is a kind of half-baked cleaning too, something you return to again and again, until the dust finally settles around the love that remains.


By the time I locked the doors, 9 hours later, I wasn’t sure if we had cleaned the house or if the house had quietly begun to clean me.


Mom felt near, like the hum of light just before sunset; present, unseen.


Maybe this, too, is coming home.

Yet, 

Still learning how to come home.


Pause and breathe, what stirred within you? 


Notes/What I felt:


Healing doesn’t follow a timeline.


Grief can hide in everyday chores.


Sometimes, wiping dust is a way of 

saying I still care.


Love remains, even when everything 

else changes.


Coming home is not a destination; 

it’s  a feeling we return to, over and over.

A SKY FULL OF CONVERSATIONS

Still Coming Home: A Quiet Journey of Healing and Breath


For my mother, whose kindness still teaches me how to breathe.

__________________________________

A SKY FULL OF CONVERSATIONS


After the long miles and the empty roads, home felt both familiar and foreign. The silence was heavier now, not sad…just filled with everything I’d seen and felt along the way. The journey had ended, but something in me still kept travelling.


Some evenings, I step outside and tilt my head toward the night sky. The air is cooler here, touched by the memory of sea wind and highway dust. 


Somewhere above the rooftops, there’s always one bright star that finds me first. It’s the one I’ve chosen to speak to; the one that feels like her.


It isn’t about believing she’s truly there. It’s about the feeling of that small shimmer of connection, that asks for nothing in return. 


I talk to her about the road, the music that carried me through, the moments I laughed alone in the car, the tears that surprised me at red lights. 


I tell her I’m learning, slowly, 

to-breathe-again.


Sometimes I fall quiet and just listen. The wind moves softly, and I imagine her in that hush; patient, kind, smiling the way she used to when words weren’t needed.


The star never flickers out. It simply waits, glowing steady, like love does when it changes form; becoming light, becoming sky, becoming memory.


Pause and breathe — what stirred within you?


Notes / What I Felt:


Grief can soften into grace.


Love still answers, even in silence.


The road home is not a place, but a feeling.

MILES OF MEMORY

Still Coming Home: 

A Quiet Journey of Healing and Breath


For my mother, whose kindness still teaches me how to breathe.


Miles of Memory


The pain of losing Mom pressed into every corner of my day, yet I knew I needed to move, to let my body, my mind, and my heart travel, even if just for a while. 


So I set out on a road trip, alone.


Nine days, ten stops, countless hours behind the wheel.


From home to Port Dickson, Malacca, Johor, and even a day trip to Singapore to visit my ex-pat yoga students. 


I drove through sunrises spilling gold across the horizon, sunsets painting quiet pinks and purples, highways stretching endlessly ahead. 


The motion of the car carried my grief along with the miles.


At each stop, I paused and allowed myself to be fully present. 


In Port Dickson, the sea breathed in rhythm with mine, each wave brushing the shore like whispered comfort. I stayed at Avilion, indulging a little, creating a safe cocoon for myself after long hours on the road. 


In Malacca, cobbled streets and old walls held stories, and I stayed at Hatten Hotel, letting their calm cradle my thoughts. 


In Johor, at DoubleTree by Hilton, I rested fully, the soft sheets and warm light wrapping me in safety, giving me permission to grieve, to cry, to remember.


In Singapore, seeing familiar faces of my former yoga students reminded me that connections endure, even across distance. Each encounter, each smile, felt like a quiet balm on my heart.


Driving alone became a moving meditation. The hum of the engine, the stretch of the road, the passing clouds; they became companions for my grief, mirrors for reflection, guides for my heart. 


I imagined Mom smiling in the clouds, her presence folding gently into my awareness, her lessons echoing in the rhythm of my breath.


This journey wasn’t about escape. It was about presence, being aware of my grief, my memories, my love, and letting each mile soften the sharp edges of loss. 


Slowly, with every turn of the wheel, every pause, I felt my heart soften; the sharp edges of loss tempered by motion, beauty, and quiet solitude.


Pause and breathe; what stirred within you?


Notes / What I Felt:


Grief moves with you, but so does love.


Travel becomes a mirror for reflection.


Every mile is a meditation


Solitude can be a gentle teacher


Every pause a moment of gentle healing


Small acts of presence carry the memory of those we’ve lost.